President
Obama's mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, worked in Indonesia for a U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) embassy cover operation that helped identify
some 5000 key members of the Indonesian Communist Party  Partai Komunis
Indonesia(PKI) that were targeted for assassination by Indonesian armed
forces units, of which her husband and President Obama's step-father, Lolo
Soetoro, was a participant. The 5000 targets' names appeared in what was called
by the CIA "the shooting list."

Furthermore, the contacts of the key 5000 PKI members was also used by the
CIA, in part using USAID official cover agents like Ann Dunham, to identify
Indonesian sympathizers with the government of President Sukarno, ousted in 1965
in a CIA-orchestrated coup, in which Lolo Soetoro took part, and the PKI, with
the net total of Indonesians killed ranging from 250,000 to 1 million.

The CIA's role in the Indonesian genocide is found in a 1990 article written
by Ralph McGehee, a CIA veteran of the agency's International Communism Branch
of the Counterintelligence Staff. The article appeared in the Fall 1990 issue of
the Covert Action Information Bulletin.

Lolo Soetoro was a colonel in the Indonesian armed forces and worked for the
CIA-installed dictator, General Suharto, from 1965, after returning to Indonesia
from Hawaii, where he married Ann Dunham, to 1970, when he joined Exxon.
President Obama's mother arrived in Indonesia to
join Soetoro with young Barack Obama, Jr. in October 1967,while the CIA's
anti-PKI and anti-Sukarno "mopping up" operations were still taking place.

Dunham Soetoro began
working for CIA/USAID front, Lembaga Persahabatan Indonesia Amerika (LIA)the
Indonesia-America Friendship Institute. In 1972, Dunham Soetoro returned to
Hawaii to continue her CIA work in Indonesia under the non-official cover of two
agency fronts, the Asia Foundation and the East-West Center at the University of
Hawaii. Dunham Soetoro returned to Indonesia in 1975 to conduct "anthropological
field work." The year 1975 is key since it was the year East Timor gained
independence from Portugal and when the CIA, working with Suharto, planned the
Indonesian invasion and bloody occupation of East Timor, a move that had been
given the
green light by then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Kissinger now serves
as a foreign policy adviser to President Obama.

On December 7, 2010, WMR reported on the details of Dunham Soetoro's
"anthropological field work":CIA files contain a 1967 letter to the editor
of the Daily Emerald from three anthropology professors at the
University of Oregon supporting a decision of the American Anthropological
Association (AAA) condemning the "intelligence meddling" of the CIA and Defense
Department in anthropological field work. 1967 was the same year that Ann Dunham
was performing such anthropological "field work" for USAID, a front for the CIA,
in Java, Indonesia. The AAA's Professor Ralph Beals [from UCLA] report stated
that the Pentagon and CIA "repeatedly interfered with anthropological work
abroad, and have clearly jeopardized our chances, as anthropologists, to do
meaningful foreign research."

And in what is the clearest evidence yet that Ann Dunham was working for
the CIA in Indonesia and elsewhere, the Beals Report stated: "several
anthropologists, especially younger ones who had difficulty in securing research
funds, were approached by 'obscure' foundations or were offered support from
such organizations only to discover later that they were expected to provide
intelligence information to the CIA." The report added, "agents of the CIA have
posed as anthropologists, much to the detriment of the anthropological research
programs."

In Ann Dunham/Soetoro's case, her foundation "sugar daddy" was the Ford
Foundation and USAID. Her boss at Ford was none other than Peter Geithner, the
father of President Obama's current Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner.

The Ford Foundation, on behalf of the CIA, began currying favor with top
Indonesian military officers as early as 1954. Ford's chief liaison to the
officers, as well as to members of the Indonesian Socialist Party, was Ford
researcher Guy Parker. The CIA's involvement with village politics in Indonesia
began when the Ford Foundation started the Modern Indonesia Project, a CIA cover
program during the Sukarno regime that was run out of Cornell University,
University of California at Berkeley, and MIT, an academic cover operation into
which Dunham Soetoro was later placed. Ford Foundation-funded scholarships were
used to provide education to a number of Indonesian military officers and
economists who would become leaders in Suharto's government.

After Suharto's "New Order" government came to power, key Indonesian assets
of the CIA were placed into top positions in Indonesia's mining, oil, and timber
industries. One was Lolo Soetoro who went to work for Exxon.

Dunham Soetoro's USAID/CIA cover in Indonesia's Java continued from 1975 to
the end of 1980 continued through the auspices of various employers, including
BAPPENAS (Badan Perencanaan Pembangunan Nasional)  the Indonesian
National Development Planning Agency, the UN's International Labor Organization,
the Ministry of Industry Provincial Development Program (PDP I), and most
significantly, the notorious USAID/CIA cover company, Development Alternatives,
Inc. (DAI) of Bethesda, Maryland.

The Obama administration is currently demanding that Cuba release Alan P.
Gross, a DAI employee charged with espionage under the cover of providing
telecommunication support for the Cuban Jewish community. Leaders of Cuba's
Jewish community have stated they are not familiar with Gross. DAI has also been
involved in funneling National Endowment for Democracy (NED) funds on behalf of
the CIA to the Venezuelan opposition to President Hugo Chavez and covert funding
for Iraqi groups during the U.S. Coalition Provisional Authority regime of U.S.
viceroy for Iraq Paul "Jerry" Bremer, a Henry Kissinger understudy.

Like Business International Corporation (BIC), the company that employed
Barack Obama after his graduation from Columbia University in 1983, DAI, which
employed Obama's mother from 1978 to 1980, has been a long-time CIA front.
Dunham Soetoro worked for DAI during the time period that Barack Obama was
attending a favorite CIA recruitment college, Occidental College of Los Angeles.
While Barack Obama was at Columbia and CIA front BIC, his mother was under
non-official CIA cover from 1981 to 1984 in Jakarta as the program officer for
women and employment for the Ford Foundation's Southeast Asia regional office, a
job that took Dunham Soetoro to other nations in the region, including the
Philippines, Thailand, and Malaysia. Dunham Soetoro's cover story was a Ford
Foundation micro-financing project.

Fluent Russian speaker, Robert J. Martens was a member of the political
section [CIA station] of the U.S. embassy in Jakarta from 1963 and in the years
leading up to the Suharto coup. Masters was number three in the embassy's
chain-of-command. In the years during which the Indonesian communists and their
sympathizer were tracked down and murdered, Martens would have been within
Dunham Soetoro's USAID CIA cover chain-of-command after she arrived in Jakarta
in 1967 for the CIA's mopping up operations in the Indonesian rural villages.
Martens, who previously served in Naples, Vienna, Salzburg, Oberammergau, and
Moscow, before being posted to Jakarta, was considered one of the CIA's top
operatives in Jakarta and he helped craft the CIA's "shooting list." Others in
Dunham Soetoro's CIA chain in Jakarta were CIA station chief Bernardo Hugh
Tovar, CIA deputy station chief Joseph Lazarsky and Jakarta embassy political
section chief Edward Masters. Tovar, a native of Colombia, had been assigned
previously to the CIA stations in Kuala Lumpur and Manila.

Masters, who was fluent in Hindi, had been posted in Frankfurt, Karachi, and
Madras before being assigned to Jakarta to help plan the CIA coup against
Sukarno. Dunham Soetoro was assigned to Java villages to conduct
"anthropological" research since the CIA had identified Indonesian village
cadres, including members of the Gerwani women's organization and SOBSI
labor federation, as primary supporters of the PKI and Sukarno.

With his CIA connections, Lolo Soetoro's dual chain-of-command, in addition
to his reporting to Suharto and his top men, would have also included the U.S.
embassy's defense attache, U.S. Army Colonel Willis G. Ethel. Colonel Ethel
worked closely with Indonesian intelligence chief Ali Murtopo.

The CIA officials in Indonesia reported to William Colby, the director of the
CIA's Far East Division. Colby was the brains behind another CIA assassination
program, the Phoenix Program in South Vietnam.

From 1989 to 1990, reporter Kathy Kadane conducted a series of interviews
with former CIA personnel who were involved in the 1965 coup and the subsequent
mass killings of Communists. Martens revealed the role of the CIA "shooting
list" for Suharto's army, in which Lolo Soetoro served, in the systematic
assassination of PKI members: "It was really a big help to the army . . . they
probably killed a lot of people. and I probably have a lot of blood on my hands,
but that's not all bad. There's a time when you have to strike hard at a
decisive moment." Asked whether the CIA sent Martens to Indonesia in 1963 to
compile kill lists, Colby responded, "Maybe. I don't know. Maybe we did. I've
forgotten."

In order to communicate the names of suspected Communists from outlying
villages like those where Dunham Soetoro worked, the CIA provided Indonesian
military officers and CIA agents with Collins KWM-2 radios, requisitioned from
U.S. Air Force stocks at Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines and flown to
Jakarta on U.S. Air Force C-130 transport planes. National Security Agency
intercept stations in Southeast Asia also picked up the radio transmissions from
the Indonesian army field officers and CIA overseers like Dunham Soetoro to
ensure that all suspected PKI members were identified for elimination by
matching the "field" human intelligence with other NSA information compiled from
intercepts of Indonesian commercial and government communications, i.e., signals
intelligence or "SIGINT."

Others at the embassy who directed CIA operations against the PKI included
U.S. ambassador Marshall Green and deputy chief of mission Jack Lydman. Green
dropped dead from a heart attack on a Washington, DC golf course in 1998. He
worked for Nixon national security adviser Kissinger after leaving Indonesia in
1969. Lydman later was involved in the State Department's review of Indonesian
military operations in West New Guinea in 1969, after the Indonesian annexation
of the former Dutch territory. Colonel Lolo Soetoro was involved in the bloody
Indonesian army crackdown on West Papuan secessionists in the territory.

On March 11, 1966, while Lolo Soetoro continued to assist Suharto in the
identification and rounding up of PKI members for execution, the U.S. embassy in
Jakarta sent a airgram A-654 to Washington. The airgram was drafted by Martens
and signed by Masters. The airgram stated it was necessary to compile a new list
of PKI members because information on PKI officials "remains extremely
fragmentary but sufficient additional information has been received to make a
new compilation advisable." The airgram contained a list of 80 PKI leaders and
their status.

The Indonesian army's and CIA's kill list would not end with the elimination
of PKI members and their sympathizers. Kill lists would play out in West Papua,
East Timor, and Aceh province during the time of Obama's "Mommy Dearest's"
bloody work in Indonesia on behalf of her bosses at the CIA, USAID, and Ford
Foundation.

The problem for Barack Obama is not shouldering blame for sins of his mother
and step-father but the fact that he has lied completely about their history. In
his book, "The Audacity of Hope," Obama writes about his mother's first trip to
Indonesia in 1967: "In later years my mother would insist that had she known
what had transpired in the preceding months, we never would have made the trip.
But she didn't know  the full story of the coup and the purge was slow to
appear in American newspapers. Indonesians didn't talk about it either." If they
were truly Ann Dunham Soetoro's words, we can be certain of one thing: she
trained her son to lie just as well as she did.